Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2017 Jan 6;12(1):79-86. doi: 10.2215/CJN.03390316. Epub 2016 Oct 26.
Diet soda consumption is common in the United States and is associated with impaired glucose metabolism, diabetes, and metabolic syndrome.
DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: We prospectively analyzed diet soda consumption, assessed by food frequency questionnaire at baseline (1987-1989) and a follow-up examination (1993-1995), and incident ESRD through December 31, 2012 in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study (n=15,368).
Baseline mean age of participants was 54 years, 55% were female, and 27% were black. The majority of participants (43.5%) consumed <1 glass/wk of diet soda; 17.8% consumed 1-4 glasses/wk; 25.3% consumed 5-7 glasses/wk; and 13.5% consumed >7 glasses/wk. Over a median follow-up of 23 years, 357 incident ESRD cases were observed. Relative to <1 glass/wk of diet soda, consuming 1-4 glasses/wk, 5-7 glasses/wk, and >7 glasses/wk, respectively, was associated with 1.08-times (95% confidence interval [95% CI], 0.75 to 1.55), 1.33-times (95% CI, 1.01 to 1.75), and 1.83-times (95% CI, 1.01 to 2.52) higher risk of ESRD after adjusting for age, sex, race-center, education level, smoking status, physical activity, total caloric intake, eGFR, body mass index category, diabetes, systolic BP, and serum uric acid (P value for trend <0.001). Results were similar after additional adjustment for dietary acid load, diet quality, dietary sodium, dietary fructose, sugar-sweetened beverages, and dietary phosphorus. Risk estimates were similar by body mass index category (P value for interaction = 0.82), but the association between diet soda and ESRD was only significant for those who were overweight or obese at baseline. Sugar-sweetened beverage consumption was not significantly associated with ESRD in the fully adjusted model.
Diet soda consumption was associated with higher ESRD risk in this general population sample. Further research is necessary to validate these findings in other study populations and to examine potential mechanisms through which diet soda could impact kidney disease.
在美国,饮用无糖苏打水很常见,这与葡萄糖代谢受损、糖尿病和代谢综合征有关。
设计、地点、参与者和测量方法:我们前瞻性地分析了饮食苏打水的消费情况,通过基线(1987-1989 年)和随访检查(1993-1995 年)的食物频率问卷进行评估,并通过 2012 年 12 月 31 日在社区动脉粥样硬化风险研究(n=15368)中评估了 incident ESRD。
参与者的基线平均年龄为 54 岁,55%为女性,27%为黑人。大多数参与者(43.5%)每周饮用<1 杯无糖苏打水;17.8%每周饮用 1-4 杯;25.3%每周饮用 5-7 杯;13.5%每周饮用>7 杯。在中位随访 23 年期间,观察到 357 例 incident ESRD 病例。与每周饮用<1 杯无糖苏打水相比,每周饮用 1-4 杯、5-7 杯和>7 杯分别与 ESRD 的风险增加 0.82 倍(95%置信区间[95%CI],0.75 至 1.55)、1.33 倍(95%CI,1.01 至 1.75)和 1.83 倍(95%CI,1.01 至 2.52)相关,调整年龄、性别、种族中心、教育水平、吸烟状况、身体活动、总热量摄入、eGFR、体重指数类别、糖尿病、收缩压和血清尿酸后(P 值趋势<0.001)。在进一步调整饮食酸负荷、饮食质量、饮食钠、饮食果糖、含糖饮料和饮食磷后,结果相似。风险估计按体重指数类别相似(P 值交互作用=0.82),但在基线超重或肥胖的人群中,无糖苏打水与 ESRD 之间的关联才具有统计学意义。在完全调整模型中,含糖饮料的消耗与 ESRD 无显著相关性。
在该一般人群样本中,饮用无糖苏打水与更高的 ESRD 风险相关。需要进一步的研究来验证这些发现是否适用于其他研究人群,并研究无糖苏打水如何影响肾脏疾病的潜在机制。